Omschrijving
Community, home, and identity are concepts that have concerned scholars in a variety of fields for some time. This volume includes chapters that address how the law and lawyers contribute (or detract) from the creation and maintenance of community and, in some cases, the conscious destruction of communities.
’This sophisticated transatlantic collection of essays well illustrates the social turn in Property Law scholarship stimulated by the Association for Law, Property, and Society. The authors explore crucial means through which Property Law in the US and UK, here including Land Use Planning and Real Estate Finance, help build and sometimes destroy community, family, and individual identities.’ J. Peter Byrne, Georgetown University Law Center, USA ’This book delivers fresh thinking on the intersections between laws and policies that govern place . It is timely in its concern with the circumstances in which the meanings of home as a base for community and identity are shaped, supported and sometimes subverted by property and housing, and deserves to be widely read.’ Lorna Fox O'Mahony, Durham Law School, UK ’Community, Home, and Identity unlocks the intricate relationship between law, community, and housing as a unique feature of American society. Together, the various authors illustrate the historical and enduring impact of federal, state, local and even international laws, policies, and norms on housing and the notion of community .’ Carol N. Brown, University of North Carolina, USA
Michael Diamond is Professor of Law at Georgetown University Law Center where he is the Director of Georgetown’s Harrison Institute for Housing and Community Development and directs its Housing and Community Development Clinic. He also teaches Corporations and Property. He has published extensively on these and related subjects. Terry L. Turnipseed is Associate Professor of Law, Syracuse University College of Law. His research interests include eminent domain, sexual individual rights, spousal property rights upon death, trust fiduciary law, and transfer taxation. Teaching interests include voting rights, eminent domain, property, wills and trusts, estate planning, and estate and gift taxation. He has published widely in these and related areas.